Chemical glyphosate was present in Cheerios, Lucky Charms, and Quaker Old Fashioned Oats

Chemical glyphosate was present in Cheerios, Lucky Charms, and Quaker Old Fashioned Oats

A cancer-causing ingredient used in Monsanto’s Roundup weed killer has been found in a number of children's breakfast cereals, according to too an environmental group.

The activist group claimed that the chemical glyphosate was present in Cheerios, Lucky Charms, and Quaker Old Fashioned Oats, according to a report from FoxNews.

The discovery comes just one day after groundskeeper who developed terminal cancer after using Monsanto’s weed-killing products for years was awarded o $39 million in compensation and $250 million in punitive damage

The Environmental Working Group (EWG) said they tested almost 45 food products, with three-fourths of those testing positive for high levels of glyphosate.

“We’re very concerned that consumers are eating more glyphosate than they know,” said Scott Faber, who is the vice president of government affairs at EWG. They did a lab test involving “45 samples of products made with conventionally grown oats,” he said, CBS News reported.

According to EpochTimes: In a statement Fox Business, a spokesperson for General Mills said that “our products are safe and without question, they meet regulatory safety levels.”

In a statement, Quaker told CBS News: “We proudly stand by the safety and quality of our Quaker products. Any levels of glyphosate that may remain are significantly below any limits of the safety standards set by the EPA and the European Commission as safe for human consumption.”

“I was shocked,” said Dr. Jennifer Lowry, the chief of the Council on Environmental Health for the American Academy of Pediatrics, CBS News reported.

“We don’t know a lot about the effects of glyphosate on children,” Lowry said. “And essentially we’re just throwing it at them.”

A California jury on Aug. 10 found Monsanto liable in a lawsuit filed by a man who alleged the company’s glyphosate-based weed-killers, including Roundup, caused his cancer and ordered the company to pay $289 million in damages.

Monsanto said on Aug. 13 it planned to challenge the verdict on the grounds that the judge should have barred scientific evidence presented by California school groundskeeper Dewayne Johnson’s lawyers as insufficient.

“Plaintiffs are putting forward junk science that is not based upon the 40 years of safe glyphosate use and studies,” Scott Partridge, Monsanto’s vice president of global strategy, told Reuters.

“They attempted to color science with very emotional arguments designed to inflame jurors.”

But according to the EWG, “Roundup was produced for decades by Monsanto, which this year merged with the German pharmaceutical company Bayer AG. In the case decided last week, the jury found that Monsanto knew for decades of the product’s hazards and not only failed to warn customers, but schemed to publicly discredit the evidence.

The California case that ended Friday was the first of reportedly thousands of lawsuits against Monsanto.

These suits have been brought by farm workers and others who allege that they developed cancer from years of exposure to Roundup.”

Monsanto has frequently disputed the allegations that Roundup’s glyphosate causes cancer, and it told CBS on Aug. 15 that “glyphosate does not cause cancer” and “has a more than 40-year history of safe use.”